1. At a Glance – The Titanic Called, It Wants Its Script Back
Market Cap: ₹558 Cr
Current Price: ₹27
3-Month Return: -9.83%
Debt: ₹1,645 Cr
Book Value: ₹-115
TTM Sales: ₹-141 Cr
TTM EPS: ₹-3.08
Interest Coverage: 0.91
Debtor Days: 538
Ladies and gentlemen, welcome aboard Essar Shipping Ltd, where the ships are fewer, the rigs are gone, the sales are evaporating, and the auditor is waving a red “going concern” flag like it’s Republic Day.
Q3 FY26 numbers? Sales of ₹0.04 Cr. Yes, zero point zero four. That’s not shipping revenue. That’s maybe someone paid for tea and biscuits onboard.
PAT for the quarter: ₹-88 Cr.
EPS: ₹-4.26.
Meanwhile, debt still stands at ₹1,645 Cr and net worth is deeply negative. Yet, market cap: ₹558 Cr.
Question for you: Are we valuing the ships… or the drama?
2. Introduction – From Shipping Giant to Financial Thriller
Incorporated in 2010, Essar Shipping Ltd was supposed to be an integrated logistics powerhouse — sea transportation, oilfield services, logistics, rigs, tankers, dry bulkers — the works.
Today?
It looks more like a restructuring case study.
The company operates in three verticals:
- Fleet operating and chartering
- Oilfield services (rigs)
- Logistics services
But here’s the twist — most assets have already been disposed of to repay lenders.
Accumulated losses? ₹6,164.19 Cr as per latest announcement.
Auditors? Expressing going-concern doubts.
Lenders? Initiated recovery proceedings.
And yet — exceptional income keeps popping up like surprise cameos in a Bollywood reboot.
So what are we looking at?
A turnaround story?
A financial restructuring laboratory?
Or a listed shell surviving on asset sales?
Let’s investigate like a slightly sarcastic forensic accountant.
3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?
Originally, the company operated:
1️ Fleet Operating & Chartering
Tankers and dry bulkers running international and coastal voyages.
2️ Oilfield Services
Land rigs and semi-submersible rigs for drilling services.
3️ Logistics Services
Trucks, trailers, tippers.
But revenue breakup FY23 tells a story:
- Rig operating & chartering: 36%
- Interest income: 36%
- Other non-operating income: 27%
- Fleet earnings: 1%
Pause.
If interest income and non-operating income are 63% combined… are we a shipping company or a financial asset disposal desk?
Geographically:
So essentially, operations were heavily overseas.
And then disinvestments began: